Chemistry Year 11 Notes May 2026
This page was a crime scene. Crossed-out numbers, tear stains, and a furious scribble: “WHY IS AVOGADRO’S NUMBER 6.02 x 10^23???” Below, in smaller handwriting: “Because it’s the number of particles in one mole. Just memorize it, idiot.” Alex laughed. He’d written that. And now he remembered: moles = mass / molar mass. n = m/M. The formula had clawed itself into his brain through sheer frustration.
A thermometer crying ice cubes (endothermic: absorbs heat, feels cold) and a thermometer on fire (exothermic: releases heat, feels hot). His caption: “Endo = enters cold. Exo = exits hot.” Simple. He’d never forget that now. chemistry year 11 notes
A battlefield. Reactants on the left, products on the right. A tiny general shouting: “WHAT YOU START WITH, YOU END WITH!” Conservation of mass. You can’t create or destroy atoms—just rearrange them. Alex had written: “Coefficients are your friends. Subscripts are lies (don’t change them).” This page was a crime scene



